Judicial
Watch Petitions Supreme Court on Post-Election Day Ballot
Counting
Our efforts to clean up our election system continue.
Our legal team just filed a petition for a writ
of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court challenging the
decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in the case
filed on behalf of Congressman Mike Bost and two presidential electors from
Illinois to prevent state election officials from extending Election Day
for 14 days beyond the date established by federal law (Rep.Michael
J. Bost, Laura Pollastrini, and Susan Sweeney v. The Illinois State Board
of Elections and Bernadette Matthews (No.
1:22-cv-02754, 23-2644)).
We filed
our lawsuit on May 25, 2022.
Federal law defines Election Day as the first Tuesday after the first
Monday in November of every even-numbered year. The initial
complaint states: “Despite Congress’ clear statement regarding a
single national Election Day, Illinois has expanded Election Day by
extending by 14 days the date for receipt and counting of vote-by-mail
ballots.” The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit just
ruled in another Judicial Watch lawsuit, which was filed on behalf of
the Libertarian Party of Mississippi, that counting ballots received after
Election Day is unlawful.
Illinois election law allows vote-by-mail ballots received up to 14 days
after the polls close on Election Day to be counted as if they were cast
and received on or before Election Day. Illinois law also provides that
“[e]ven vote-by-mail ballots without postmarks shall be counted if
received up to 14 calendar days after Election Day if the ballots are dated
on or before Election Day.” In a split decision, a Seventh Circuit
appellate court panel found that Congressman Bost had no standing to
challenge the provision, despite the increased costs and injuries to him
caused by the two-week counting of ballots that arrive after Election
Day.
In our petition
to the U.S. Supreme Court, we state:
For over 130 years, this Court has heard claims brought by federal
candidates challenging state time, place, or manner regulations affecting
their federal elections. Until recently, it was axiomatic that candidates
had standing to challenge these regulations. Indeed, “it’s hard to
imagine anyone who has a more particularized injury than the candidate
has.” … That is because a candidate who “pours money and sweat into a
campaign, who spends time away from her job and family to traverse the
campaign trail, and who puts her name on a ballot has an undeniably
different— and more particularized—interest in the lawfulness of the
election” than “some random voter.”
***
Petitioners are a sitting multi-term Congressman and two federal
electors. They challenged an Illinois law (the “Receipt Deadline”) that
allows absentee ballots to be received and counted after the day specified
in federal statutes for holding federal elections (“Election Day”).
They contend that Illinois’ Receipt Deadline is preempted by the federal
Election Day statutes.
***
This petition presents an opportunity for the Court to provide lower
courts and litigants much needed guidance on candidate standing, outside of
the high-stakes, emergency, post-election litigation where these issues
commonly arise.
It is a scandal that the courts would deny a federal candidate the
ability to challenge an election provision that could lead to illegal votes
being cast and counted. Illinois’ 14-day extension of Election Day
thwarts federal law, violates the civil rights of voters, and invites
fraud. The Supreme Court should take up this case and reaffirm the right of
federal candidates to challenge unlawful election schemes.
Government Censorship of Conservative Social Media In 2020
Election Detailed
We received 274
pages of records from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
revealing an extensive effort by government and non-government entities to
monitor and censor social media posts on fraud during the 2020
election.
These previously secret documents show that the Deep State worked
full-time to censor and monitor Americans in collusion with left-wing
interest groups and Big Tech. The Trump administration should launch a
criminal probe into this assault on the First Amendment civil rights of
Americans.
The records were uncovered thanks to our November 2022 Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit
for communications between the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency (CISA), a division of DHS, and the Election Integrity Partnership
(EIP), which was created to flag online election content for censorship and
suppression(Judicial
Watch Inc. vs. U.S. Department of Homeland Security (No.
1:22-cv-03560 )).
Here are some of the details.
A message
on September 29, 2020, from “[email protected]” to
“Misinformation Reports” at CIS (Center
for Internet Security, a CISA-funded non-profit) has the subject
line: “EIP-257Case #CIS - MIS000019: CT [Connecticut] Misinformation
related to absentee ballots and fraud” and states:
Analysts at the EIP [Election Integrity
Partnership] looked for cross-platform spread of
this post, including in local media, but
it appears contained to Facebook at this point.
The issue has been raised with Facebook to
see if additional steps can be taken
on the platform.
Included in the chain from [redacted] to “Misinformation Reports” is
a reply:
Hey [redacted]
The platforms may or may not take action, and they sometimes
take action without notifying EIP [Election Integrity Partnership].
“Done” is a signal to other EIP analysts that no more analysis needs to
be done on their end at this time.
What we can be sure about at this stage is that Facebook have been
notified, but nothing else it seems. EIP will periodically re-check the
link to see if the content has been removed and will update the ticket if
it has. Facebook may also be investigating the misinformation and may
update the ticket itself if an action is taken.
A response from a person at Stanford whose name is redacted reads:
Just wanted to add in, it seems like the links are now down. I agree
that this should not have moved into Done without sending a summary to the
reporting partners (you all) and I've talked to the team about this, we
will have that for the next one! Facebook doesn't tell us specifically when
they take action sometimes so we just have to keep checking the
links. I've asked the team to go write a summary for
this incident, let us know if we can provide further help here.
Also, on September 29, 2020, “[email protected]” writes
to [redacted] regarding Connecticut absentee ballots:
Thanks for flagging this. Our analysts looked into the claim - the
specific post was spread through a personal network but didn't take off
further across social media platforms. We flagged the post to Facebook for
removal and the link is no longer active which means it has either been
taken down or made private to the individual's Facebook. We are monitoring
similar narratives in case this kind of message comes up again
An October 1, 2020, message from a person at CIS using the
“[email protected]” address responds:
Thanks EIP. We have kept the election official updated on the steps you
took. We also received confirmation from Facebook (by way of CISA) that
Facebook took action on this case.
The records include a September 26, 2020, email
from Trevor
Timmons, chief information officer of the Colorado Secretary of State,
to Central Cyber [redacted] @cisecurity.org, using the subject line
“Reporting Twitter post with misinformation on recent Colorado
mailing:”
We'd like Twitter to review recent posts from a Denver news channel that
contain misinformation about a recent mailing from the Colorado Secretary
of State's office.
[Redacted Twitter posts]
The posts have been highlighted as containing false information by
personnel from our office, other media sources, and others. At best, we'd
suggest they be removed as promoting inaccurate and false information. At a
minimum, we'd request they be labeled as “false.”
Brian Scully, who was head of the Mis-, Dis-, Malinformation (MDM)
branch at the National Risk Management Center at DHS, forwards this to
an individual whose name and email address are redacted, commenting:
“This came in from Colorado over the weekend. Twitter did not take either
down.”
On October 1, 2020, “[email protected]” writes
to someone whose name is redacted using the subject line “Fraudulent
Facebook Site Hood River County, OR:”
I'm adding Facebook to this ticket, and
recommending that they take action on this page.
We believe that this page was automatically
generated after someone running for Mayor inHood River County
repeatedly tagged themselves at the “Hudson River County Elections
Office”. This person uses two Facebook
accounts with different names [redacted] which is why
two people have checked into this location. Their
repeated check-ins triggered the creation of
this page, which now exclusively features
their location--tagged posts with their commentary about
local politics.
Our understanding is that another
verified page, such as the Hood River County page,
could
claim or request deletion for this page. However, we recommend that Facebook
takes
immediate action on this page (and similar
unofficial pages for election-related organizations), due
to its potential for spreading misinformation about voting
processes in Hood River County.
On the same day “[email protected]” comments on the
same string:
Additionally, Facebook should more generally review exploitation of the
"unofficial pages" feature in the context of elections. Can page creation
see a lag or delay in order to prevent brigading in the final weeks of the
election?
In this case, the tagging activity began in May 2019, initially by a
mayoral candidate, then by others who have turned it into an unofficial
town forum. It may not always be benign.
On October 5, 2020, a person whose name is redacted writes
to Matthew Masterson [formerly
with DHS and Stanford Internet Observatory], and Brian Scully of the
DHS, plus numerous other redacted individuals, using the subject line
“EIP-CIS Sync:”
Hi all,
The [email protected] reporting system is now up and
running, as is EIP's inbound and outbound tip system. This call is to
discuss how this process has gone so far, and to nail down the EIP <>
ISAC SLA moving forward.
On October 27, 2020, Scully writes
to “[email protected]” and other redacted individuals,
using the subject line “Duplicate reporting to Twitter:”
Twitter asked if we could have reports coming through misinfo
reports only be reported to them via CISA. I know the EIP is sharing some
of the reports with them as well and they are trying to cut back on
duplicates. Any issues with this approach? From a process standpoint it
would look like - election official> [misinformationreport]s >
CISA/EIP/Others > CISA sends to Twitter> rest of process is the
same.
On October 28, 2020, someone whose name is redacted responds:
Hello Brian,
Sorry for the delayed response here - took a day to settle this out on
the EIP side. We are doing our best effort on the CIS reports to not
duplicate notifications to Twitter when its (a) marked as Twitter being
notified (assumption is everything sent with CIS #XXXXX has made it to
Twitter) and (b) we have no substantial research to add to the matter.
There have been a couple cases in the last week where we did not escalate
CIS reports due to this, and we will continue to push on this front. Given
how close we are to the election, I think this is the best option so that
every report goes through CISA to the platforms, and EIP also sends over
the relevant information only when we have further analysis to add which
might be of help (more links, evidence of origination or coordination,
etc.). We don't want to overwhelm them, but on the day of, I think we'd
kick ourselves more for not alerting than for double reporting.
Does this sound okay? We have communicated this to our Twitter partners
through our channel with them.
Scully responds in part:
I'm not sure how we'd go from double reporting to no reporting in a
scenario where a report comes through CIS as CISA will always report
those to Twitter, but agree more reporting is better than less.
On November 2, 2020, Scully writes
to a redacted recipient:
Is EIP open to receiving reports from civil society groups? Was asked by
our friends at Harvard.
A person whose name is withheld responds:
Hey Brian,
EIP takes tips from many civil society partners -
I'm sure they'd welcome intake from Harvard. The same tip address
should be fine.
On November 8, 2020, a
message from “[email protected]” is sent to
individuals whose names have been redacted, using the subject line
“Antrim County, MI election results error in reporting:”
Hello ISAC [Information
Sharing and Analysis Center, a CISA-supported collaboration]- We are
moving you to https://2020partnership.atlassian.net/servicedesk/customer/portal/5/EIP-949
whichFacebook, Twitter, and Google are also on. We tweeted about this claim
last night (here),and continued to
track the growth of this narrative through today.
This
narrative, which started around the situation in
Antrim, has now been used to throw doubts
on the results in Georgia and other regions.
On November 9, 2020, someone at CIS using
“[email protected]” writes
to people whose names are withheld, using the subject line: “Million MAGA
March - Nov 14th -Telegram:”
Thanks. I have spoken to [redacted] and this to
make sure they are keeping the right authorities in sync.
On November 9, 2020, “[email protected]” sends a
message to individuals whose names are redacted, using the subject line
“Nevada GOP claims in Twitter thread they found ballots that could have
been filled out by anyone”
Thanks, Twitter has received and is reviewing.
A November 10, 2020, message
from “[email protected]” to persons whose names are
withheld, using the subject line ‘Million MAGA March - Nov 14th –
Telegram,” includes a chart showing the number of tweets on the subject
and the message:
ISAC, please find an updated graph showing viral spread of this event on
Twitter. Growth Is linear and does not yet show signs of diminishing. We
will continue to monitor.
In August 2023, we filed two FOIA lawsuits
against the U.S. Department of Justice and other federal agencies for
communications between the agencies and Facebook and Twitter regarding the
government’s involvement in content moderation and censorship on the
social media platforms.
In June 2023, we sued
DHS for all records of communications tied to the Election Integrity
Partnership. Based on representations from the EIP (see here
and here),
the federal government, social media companies, the EIP, the Center
for Internet Security (a non-profit organization funded
partly by DHS and the Defense Department) and numerous other leftist
groups communicated privately via the Jira
software platform developed by Atlassian.
In February 2023, we sued
the U.S. Department Homeland Security (DHS) for records showing cooperation
between the Cybersecurity and Information Security Agency (CISA) and social
media platforms to censor and suppress free speech.
In January 2023 we sued
the DOJ for records of communications between the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) and social media sites regarding foreign influence in
elections, as well as the Hunter Biden laptop story.
In September 2022, we sued
the Secretary of State of the State of California for having YouTube censor
a Judicial Watch election integrity video.
In May 2022, YouTube censored a Judicial Watch video about Biden
corruption and election integrity issues in the 2020 election. The video,
titled “Impeach? Biden Corruption Threatens National Security,” was
falsely determined to be “election misinformation” and removed by
YouTube, and Judicial Watch’s YouTube account was suspended for a week.
The video featured an interview with me. Judicial Watch continues to post
its
video content on its Rumble channel (https://rumble.com/vz7aof-fitton-impeach-biden-corruption-threatens-national-security.html).
In July 2021, we uncovered
records from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which
revealed that Facebook coordinated closely with the CDC to control the
COVID narrative and “misinformation” and that over $3.5 million in free
advertising given to the CDC by social media companies.
In May 2021, we revealed
documents showing that Iowa state officials pressured social media
companies Twitter and Facebook to censor posts about the 2020
election.
In April 2021, we published
documents revealing how California state officials pressured social media
companies (Twitter, Facebook, Google (YouTube)) to censor posts about the
2020 election.
Let’s hope the new Trump administration further exposes (and
prosecutes where appropriate) this dangerous government censorship of
millions of Americans.
After 19 Years Defense Department Releases Details on Gov’t
Operation That Could Have Prevented 9/11 Attacks
After almost 19 years, the Department of Defense produced 62
pages of records out of hundreds of previously withheld documents
regarding the U.S. intelligence program “Operation Able
Danger.”
Able Danger was formed in 1999. It compiled publicly available
information regarding al Qaeda and other targets.
The Defense Department identified hundreds of pages of responsive
records but withheld them, claiming the overwhelming majority are still
classified to this day.
In August 2005 interviews,
other experts and I reported that the operation identified four future
September 11, 2001, hijackers as al Qaeda members in the United States well
before the attacks.
The Senate Intelligence Committee began its investigation
of the program in August 2005. In September 2005, the Senate Judiciary
Committee conducted a
hearing on Able Danger, but members of the data-mining team were blocked
from testifying.
In December 2005, we submitted a FOIA request to the Defense Department
for related records, as well as information on “U.S. intelligence, law
enforcement and/or counterterrorism projects and/or programs utilizing data
mining software/techniques to search open-source records in the public
domain.”
The Defense Department response
on August 24 from the U.S. Special Operations Command identifies hundreds
of pages of responsive records but claims the overwhelming majority are
still classified and, over 20 years later, remain exemptedfrom
disclosure:
[S]pecifically, Sections 1.4(a), military plans, weapon systems, or
operations; 1.4(c), intelligence activities (including covert actions),
intelligence sources or methods, or Cryptology; 1.4(g), vulnerabilities or
capabilities of systems, installations, projects, plans, or protection
services relating to the national security; and Section 1.7(e), for
compilation of items of information that are individually unclassified, but
may be classified if the compiled information reveals an additional
association or relationship.
The records we obtained include an unredacted, declassified Top
Secret/SCI record containing a 17-page listing of unclassified, open-source
internet resources listing websites and URLs for topics such as terrorism
news stories; Office of the Coordinator of Counterterrorism; and
“Albanian Terrorism in Kosovo,” among many others. Across the bottom of
page three of the lists of open-source records is a statement: “Began
to understand the status of ongoing efforts!” The author of the
exclamation is not identified.
Small passages of what seem to be declassified Top Secret/SCI analytical
reports (unnamed and undated) featurecommentary
such as:
Arab countries in North Africa especially, Algeria, Tunisia, Morrocco,
Libya, Egypt, and almost all other Arab countries have been annoyed for the
high profile of Osama bin Laden first in Pakistan and later in Afghanistan
especially, when he publicly claims that he trains Arab fundamentalists to
overthrow most of Arab regimes in the Middle East.
The records also cite journalist Jason Burke’s December 1998 reporting
that Osama bin Laden decided to get into drug trafficking as a new weapon
and approached (through intermediaries) major opium and heroin dealers, as
well as major landowners in the opium-growing districts of Afghanistan, and
offered to buy all of the opium they grow.
Drug trafficking was also featured in an undated/unsourced, declassified
TOP SECRET/SCI record
that stated:
In fact, heroin is the major source of income for the Taleban [sic]
government that has seized power in Afghanistan. It is not the Taleban
government alone; heroin is also a major source of earning for the Inter
Service Intelligence ISI of Pakistan, which has been providing support and
assistance for the Taleban government which has seized power in
Afghanistan. The lion’s share of the funds earned through heroin
smuggling is spent on intelligence service and also on subversive
activities carried out by the ISI in neighboring countries.
Another undated/unsourced excerpt
states:
Opium is traded at large bazaars in Afghanistan that are the treacherous
domain of criminal syndicates. One of the more notorious is located in the
town of Sangin, a three-hour drive west of the Taliban capital of Kandahar.
‘Sangin is known as a dangerous place,’ says Bernard Frahl, head of the
U.N. drug-agency office in Islamabad, who visited the market town in
October. “It is known for people going in and not coming out.” Of about
500 shopkeepers crowded along one main street, and two or three footpaths
off it, he says, almost half sell opium.
The records include the homepage of a Swedish construction firm and what
appears to be a worker complaint from someone employed in Saudi
Arabia.
It shouldn’t take two decades to decide that the American people
can’t see documents about a military investigation that could have
prevented 9/11. What an insult to the American people and the victims of
9/11.
After $107 Billion Taxpayer Bailout, U.S. Postal Service Reports
$9.5 Billion Loss
Nothing illustrates bureaucratic waste better than the United States
Postal Service, which seems to be throwing our tax dollars to the wind. Our
Corruption Chronicles blog reports
the latest.
The famously mismanaged U.S. Postal Service (USPS), also plagued by
scandals for secretly spying on Americans, lost a staggering $9.5 billion
in fiscal year 2024, which ended in September. The loss marks a substantial
increase of $3 billion over the previous year when the agency reported an
already hefty $6.5 billion deficit. In the meantime, taxpayers continue
bailing it out despite a well-documented history of transgressions and
exorbitant debt. Just two years ago Congress provided the long troubled
USPS with a clean slate, relieving
it of $107 billion in obligations. In its latest year-end financial
statement the USPS blames 80% of the fiscal year’s net losses on the
“amortization of unfunded retiree pension liabilities and non-cash
workers’ compensation adjustments” due to inflation.
Laughably, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy claims that a transformation
and modernization plan issued in the spring of 2021 has made significant
progress since its implementation and assures the initiative is driving the
USPS forward to financial stability. “Our pricing and product strategies
are continuing to improve our revenue picture and fuel market share gains
in our package business, demonstrating the increasing competitiveness of
the Postal Service,” said DeJoy, who was unanimously selected Postmaster
General by the USPS Board of Governors in 2020 after being appointed by
Donald Trump. In a statement the
panel describes DeJoy as “an accomplished business executive with more
than 35 years of experience” who transformed a small, family-owned
transportation company into a nationwide provider of highly engineered,
technology-driven contract logistics solutions. A 2001 federal audit found
that DeJoy’s North Carolina-based firm, a USPS contractor for over two
decades, overbilled the government by at least $53
million after receiving no-bid contracts that should have been
competitively awarded. That did not stop him from getting the job,
however.
Though the USPS has performed horribly under his leadership, DeJoy
remains optimistic, saying
at a recent Board of Governors meeting that he has “complete confidence
that in 2025 we will accomplish more meaningful progress as we accelerate
our execution and refinement of Delivering for America strategies.” He
describes the project as the “only comprehensive plan that attempts to
rescue the United States Postal Service in the last 25 years” and “the
only plan that focuses on growth and viability.” It is worth noting that
the Postmaster General recently came under fire for referring to public
sector unions as his “comrades”
and proclaiming his goal of achieving a “100 percent unionized”
operation at the nation’s ailing postal service. In a recording published
online, DeJoy says “I was actually with our supervisors’ union
yesterday, and I said ‘comrades, how come you’re not celebrating
me?’”
The colossal 2024 loss marks the latest of many scandals for the USPS,
long a bastion of mismanagement and frivolous spending that has fleeced
American taxpayers out of enormous sums in the last few years alone. In
2021, the USPS reported a net loss of $4.9 billion and in 2020 a net loss
of $9.2 billion. One federal audit slammed the agency for blowing the
opportunity to save nearly $22 million had it bothered to maintain its
fleet of vehicles more efficiently. A few years before that the USPS blew
hundreds of thousands of dollars on professional sports tickets, alcohol,
and fancy meals while it claimed to be crippled by an $8.3 billion deficit.
The items were purchased by USPS managers and employees with special charge
cards issued to U.S. government agencies. The USPS’s top executives have
also been found to receive illegally high salary and compensation packages
that should outrage the public.
The nation’s postal service has also been caught conducting
surveillance operations unrelated to its official duties. In the summer of
2021 Judicial Watch sued
the USPS for information about a secret program that tracks and collects
Americans’ social media posts and flags the posts as “inflammatory”
or otherwise worthy of further scrutiny by other government agencies. The
USPS’s law enforcement arm, U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS), has
also admitted using sophisticated
hacking devices that can breach cell phones to spy on Americans. The
hacking tools, known as Cellebrite and GrayKey, have been used by the
agency to extract previously unattainable information from seized mobile
devices. Judicial Watch has filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
request with the USPS for information on the devices used by the agency to
hack cell phones.
Until next week,
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